US Enters World War II - Anderson County Schools Home

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US Enters World War II
U.S. Armed Forces Mobilize

When the US entered the war, it had to bring its forces
into readiness.

In 1940 the government increased military spending.


This helped end the Great Depression.
Thousands found work in factories, made military
supplies

Army Chief of Staff, General George C. Marshall led the
mobilization effort.

The United States needed soldiers.
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American women filled a variety of vital roles in the
military.

New bases were needed to train and house soldiers.
Mobilizing the Armed Forces
 Finding



Soldiers
The government expanded the draft, which
had been reinstated in 1940.
Millions of young men volunteered.
Some 16 million Americans entered the
armed forces.
Mobilizing the Armed Forces
 Women
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
10,000 joined the WAVES, a navy program.
1,000 joined the WASPs, an air force
program.
150,000 served in the WAC, an army
program.
Mobilizing the Armed Forces
 Military



Bases
Most bases were built in rural areas.
The military bases transformed parts of the
United States.
California, Florida, and Texas became home
to large numbers of soldiers.
American Industry and Science
in World War II

Troops needed equipment to fight



Factories that produced consumer goods were converted to the
production of military supplies.
Roosevelt called for the production of new planes and tanks.
War supplies had to be shipped overseas.

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Submarines took a terrible toll on American shipping.
American shipyards turned out thousands of new vessels to
replace those lost during the war.

Wartime agencies regulated what factories produced, what
prices they could charge, and how the nation’s raw materials
could be used.

Producing supplies to fight the war required many workers.

Government spending during the war created millions of new
jobs.

Technology played an important role in World War II.
Mobilizing Industry
 Rosie



the Riveter
Factories needed workers at the same time men were
leaving to join the armed forces.
Women solved the problem. Millions began to work
outside the home in industrial jobs.
Working women of the war were represented by the
symbolic figure known as Rosie the Riveter.
Mobilizing Industry

Labor in WW II
 Many workers joined labor unions and the
government was concerned about strikes.

The National War Labor Board was
established in 1941 to help settle labor
disputes.
Mobilizing Science

The Manhattan Project began a top-secret
mission to build an atomic bomb.

Physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer and other American
scientists raced to develop this weapon ahead of the
Germans.
Freedom at Home
 African Americans

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
in the military
Hundreds of thousands served during World
War II.
They broke down barriers that had long
blocked their way.
They continued to face discrimination (ex.
Segregated units).
Freedom at Home
 African Americans



in the workforce
Found jobs in factories that had been
unavailable to them before the war
Still faced discrimination
A. Philip Randolph called for a march on
Washington to protest their unfair treatment
Freedom at Home
 Challenges


for Hispanic Americans
Demand for farm labor led to the Bracero
Program, which gave Mexican workers the
chance to work in the United States.
Tension over the increasing numbers of
Hispanic workers led to the zoot suit riots in
June 1943.
How and why did the Allies fight the
Battle of the Atlantic?
• Defeating the Axis Powers depended on control of the
seas. The Atlantic needed to be kept safe for shipping so
that soldiers and goods could be transported from the
United States to the other Allied nations.
•
Germany had a very powerful navy including with new
surface ships (including the giant Bismarck) and Uboats.
•
German used new tactics to increase U-boat effectiveness such
as the so-called wolf pack. U-boats sent hundreds of ships and
tons of supplies to the bottom of the sea. At the same time, the
German navy lost few of their boats.
The Allies Fight
the Battle of the Atlantic
 Allied


ships and aircraft
New ships were used to form larger, betterequipped convoys, which cut down on the
effectiveness of U-boat attacks.
Allied aircraft protected convoys from the air.
The Allies Fight
the Battle of the Atlantic
 Cracking


the Enigma
The Allies broke the German code system,
which was called the Enigma.
The Allies began to gain vital information
about the locations and plans of U-boat
formations.
World War II in the Soviet Union
Hitler broke his nonaggression pack with Stalin and invaded the
Soviet Union in 1941.
1.

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The Soviets then joined the Allies as enemies of the Axis
Powers.
At first the Soviets seemed unable to stop the German
blitzkrieg; however, the bitterly cold Russian winter proved a
great ally.
Still, the Germans held a vast portion of the western Soviet
Union and besieged the city of Leningrad.
The Germans attacked Stalingrad in August 1942.
2.

The Soviets refused to let Stalingrad fall, and Hitler suffered a
stunning defeat in early 1943.
Stalingrad marked the beginning of Germany’s collapse in the
Soviet Union.
3.

Soviet forces pushed Germany out of Russia, but lost 12
million soldiers and millions of civilians.
American Forces in
North Africa and Italy
 Why

was North Africa important?
By controlling North Africa, the British could
protect shipping on the Mediterranean Sea.
They needed the ability to ship oil from the
Middle East through the Suez Canal.
American Forces in
North Africa and Italy
 What
was the result of fighting in North
Africa?

Italy could not drive the British from Egypt.
Hitler sent troops under the direction of Erwin
Rommel – nicknamed the Desert Fox. After a
back-and-forth battle for North Africa, the
Allied forces handed the Germans a major
defeat at the battle of El Alamein.
American Forces in
North Africa and Italy
 What

happened in Italy?
British and American forces invaded Italy in
1943. The Italian people forced Mussolini
from power, but Hitler rushed into Italy to stop
the Allies.
D-Day: The Invasion of France
• To end the war as quickly as possible, the
Allies planned Operation Overlord—a
large invasion of mainland France.
• The Allies landed at Normandy on June 6,
1944—called D-Day—and began to march
on France.
D-Day: The Invasion of France
 Operation



Overlord
Planned invasion of France from the beaches
of Normandy
General Omar Bradley led the American
troops.
Good planning and speed were vital.
D-Day: The Invasion of France
 D-Day
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June 6, 1944
Allied force of 3.5 million soldiers
Germans were slow to respond
Estimated 10,000 Allied casualties, including
6,600 Americans
The Allies landed almost 1 million soldiers and
180,000 vehicles.
The History of Nazi Anti-Semitism

Anti-Semitism

Hostility toward or prejudice against Jews
 Hitler’s


Views
Told Germans that they came from a superior
race – the Aryans
Used the Jews as a scapegoat – someone to
blame for Germany’s woes after World War I
Nazi Anti-Semitism
 Hitler


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in Power
Began campaign against Jews soon after
becoming chancellor
Established a series of anti-Semitic laws
intended to drive Jews from Germany
Laws stripped Jews of their citizenship and
took away most civil and economic rights.
Laws defined who was a Jew.
Nazi Anti-Semitism
 Attacks


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
on Jews
Many Germans supported Hitler’s anti-Semitic
ideas.
Discrimination and violent attacks against
Jews continued.
Anti-Jewish riots broke out in an attack called
Kristallnacht.
Jews were sent to concentration camps,
killed, and fined for the attack.
Nazi Anti-Semitism
 Fleeing



Germany
Over 100,000 managed to leave Germany
after Kristallnacht.
Others found it difficult to leave the country as
Nazi laws had left many without money or
property.
The United States limited the number of
Germans immigrants.
The Nazi Government’s Final
Solution

World War II brought many of Europe’s 9 million Jews under the
control of the Nazi SS.
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Concentration camps were built in Germany and in other countries
that the Germans occupied.
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Conditions in the camps were horrific.
The Nazis also established ghettos to control and punish Jews.
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The camps were prisons for Jews and others considered enemies of
Hitler’s regime.
Ghettos are neighborhoods in a city to which a group of people are
confined.
In 1941 Hitler called for the total destruction of all of Europe’s Jews.

Nazi officials adopted a plan known as the Final Solution.
Concentration Camps
 Camps
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Prisons for Jews, prisoners-of-war, and
enemies of the Nazi regime
Inmates received little food and were forced to
labor.
The combination of overwork and starvation
was intended to kill.
Ghettos
 Ghettos
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Walls or fences kept the Jews inside and
those trying to leave were shot.
Food was scarce; starvation was rampant.
Diseases spread rapidly.
The worst ghetto was in Warsaw, Poland.
Some Jews in the Warsaw ghetto—the
Jewish Fighting Organization—fought back.
The Final Solution
 The


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
Final Solution
Genocide – the killing of an entire people
Involved building 6 new extermination camps
for Jews
Inmates were exposed to poison gas in
specially built chambers.
3 million Jews died in extermination camps.
3 million Jews and 5 million others were killed
by the Nazi using other means.
The American response to the
Holocaust

In 1942, Americans officials began to hear about
what was happening to the Jews in Europe and
specifically about Hitler’s Final Solution.

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The Americans were doubtful at first and thought the
reports might just be war rumors.
In 1944, Roosevelt created the War Refugee
Board.

Through this board, the United States was able to
help 200,000 Jews.
Liberating the Nazi Camps
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In 1944, Soviet troops began to discover some
of the Nazi death camps. By 1945 they reached
the huge extermination camp at Auschwitz.
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Also in 1945, American soldiers came upon
concentration camps.
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Many camp inmates died after being rescued
The Nuremberg Trials
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Many Nazis faced trial for their roles in the
Holocaust.
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The court was located at Nuremberg, Germany.
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The court was called the International Military
Tribunal.
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Twenty two Nazis were tried for war crimes,
including Hermann Göering.

Since Nuremberg, several Nazis have been
captured and tried in different courts, including
Israel.
A Slow Start in the Pacific

The Allies focused their energy and resources on defeating the Axis
in Europe.

The Japanese won a quick string of impressive victories following
Pearl Harbor.
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Drove American forces from Wake Island and Guam
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Captured the British stronghold at Hong Kong
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Took control of the Dutch East Indies (known as Indonesia
today) and British Borneo

Damaged the Allied navies in the Battle of Java Sea
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Conquered British-controlled Burma
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The Japanese soldiers were highly skilled and well trained.
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The Japanese military had excellent equipment.
The Philippines
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Japan invaded the American-controlled islands
of the Philippines in December 1941.
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General Douglas MacArthur led the defense of the
islands.
MacArthur’s troops were no match for the Japanese
and retreated to the Bataan Peninsula. Wanted
reinforcements- too risky.
In April 1942, the 10,000 American and 60,000
Filipino troops on Bataan surrendered
Thousands of these captured soldiers died when the
Japanese forced them to march through the steaming
forests of Bataan. This became known as the Bataan
Death March.
Allied Advances in the Pacific
 James


Doolittle
Led a group of 16 American bombers on a
daring air raid of Tokyo and several other
Japanese cities
Doolittle’s raid did not do major damage to the
Japanese targets
Allied Advances in the Pacific
 Fortunes
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
Shift in the Pacific
Victory in the Battle of Coral Sea
Victory in the Battle of Midway
Battle of the Coral Sea
Battle of Midway
Fortunes Shift in the Pacific
Battle of Coral Sea

U.S. Admiral Chester Nimitz sent two aircraft
carriers to stop an attack on New Guinea.
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The Americans lost an aircraft carrier in the
battle but stopped the Japanese attack.
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First time the Japanese advance had been
halted
Fortunes Shift in the Pacific
Battle of Midway

Japan tried to lure the Americans into a large
sea battle around Midway Island.
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Naval officers had broken a Japanese code and
learned of the plan.
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Nimitz devised a plan to thwart the attack and
placed his 3 aircraft carriers carefully.
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The Americans destroyed 3 of the 4 Japanese
carriers and won a major victory.
Allied Progress in the Pacific
1.
Gained control of territory in the Solomon Islands to
protect Australia
2.
Used powerful combination of land, sea, and air forces
to capture key islands
3.
Captured locations in the Gilbert, Marshall, Caroline,
and Mariana islands
4.
Took advantage of American industrial power by
replacing ships and aircrafts, which Japan was unable
to do
5.
European successes allowed more resources to be
made available in the Pacific.
6.
Recaptured the Philippines
7.
Captured strategic Japanese islands of Iwo Jima and
Okinawa
The Allies Make Progress
 Guadalcanal
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Allies wanted to gain control of the Solomon
Islands to protect Australia.
Key goal was the capture of an island called
Guadalcanal
American forces fought for 6 months and
finally defeated the Japanese
Navajo Code Talkers
 Hundreds
of Native Americans of the
Navajo nation served in the Marines as
code talkers.
 They translated messages into a coded
version of the Navajo language.
 Japanese code-breakers never figured it
out.
The Philippines
 The Allies
destroyed most of Japan’s fleet.
 Japanese began using the kamikaze
attack.
 After months of fighting, the Allies gained
control of the Philippines.
Iwo Jima

In February 1945 American forces set out to
capture Iwo Jima.
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The island would provide a good base to launch
raids against major Japanese cities.
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For the first time, Japanese soldiers were
fighting for and on Japanese land.
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The Japanese fought ferociously and refused to
surrender.
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The Allies eventually won.
Okinawa
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Allied troops invaded on April 1, 1945.
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The island was to be the launching pad for the
final invasion of Japan.
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It was a bloody battle; more than 12,000
American died at the Battle of Okinawa.
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Like Iwo Jima, the Japanese refused to
surrender and lost a staggering 110,000 troops.
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Allies gained control of the island in June 1945.
Sacrifice and Struggle for
Americans at Home

Conserving Food and other Goods
 Americans planted victory gardens.



The United States began rationing food items
such as coffee, butter, sugar, and meat.
Metal, glass, rubber, and gasoline were
scarce goods.
Americans held scrap drives to collect waste
materials that might be used in the war effort.
Sacrifice and Struggle for
Americans at Home
 Investing


in Victory
Americans bought millions of dollars
worth of war bonds.
Over half of the population did their civic
duty and bought war bonds.
Sacrifice and Struggle for
Americans at Home
 Paying

the Personal Price
Families dealt with the absence of loved ones
by displaying a flag with a blue star.
Japanese American Internment
Executive Order 9066

After Pearl Harbor, military officials began to investigate
the Japanese American community for signs of spying or
other illegal activity.

It was recommended that all people of Japanese
background be removed from the West Coast.

Order 9066 established military zones and could force
people to leave these zones.

Japanese Americans in California, Washington, Oregon,
and Arizona were forced into internment camps.
Korematsu v. United States (1944)

The Supreme Court tried to find balance between the
rights of Japanese Americans and wartime needs.

Fred Korematsu refused the executive order that
relocated 110,000 Japanese Americans to internment
camps.


He was arrested and then appealed his case to the
Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court ruled against Korematsu stating that
the relocation order was justified as a temporary wartime
measure.

He continued to work for civil rights and had his
conviction overturned in 1983.
The Yalta Conference
• Allied leaders Roosevelt, Winston
Churchill, and Joseph Stalin—the socalled Big Three—met to discuss the end
of the war and the peace afterward.
• A key goal was to determine what to do
with Germany. The leaders agreed to
divide the country into four sectors. The
Americans, Soviets, British, and French
would each occupy one of these sectors.
Berlin was also divided into four sectors.
The Yalta Conference
• Another agreement had to do with the fate
of Poland and other Eastern European
countries now occupied by the Soviets.
Stalin agreed to hold elections in these
countries after the war.
• Stalin also said that the Soviet Union
would declare war on Japan three months
after Germany was defeated.
Germany Surrenders
• On April 30, 1945, Hitler realized that all
hope for a German victory was lost. He
committed suicide in his Berlin bunker.
• Berlin surrendered on May 2, 1945. Karl
Dönitz, who had taken over as Germany’s
leader, agreed to a surrender on May 7
• In the United States, May 8 was
proclaimed V-E Day—Victory in Europe
Day.
Winning the War in the Pacific

General MacArthur and Admiral Nimitz developed plans
for a massive invasion of Japan.

A new bombing tactic was used on Japanese cities, one
designed to produce tremendous firestorms in the
bombed area.

Some Japanese leaders began to see the need for
peace and began to contact the Soviet Union.

President Harry S Truman decided to drop an atomic
bomb on Japan.

Japan surrendered on August 15, 1945.
The Atomic Bomb
 Harry
S Truman became president when
Roosevelt died. He had to decide whether
the United States should use the
Manhattan Project’s atomic bomb.
 After consulting with his advisors, Truman
decided to drop the bomb on a Japanese
city. There would be no warning.
The Atomic Bomb
Hiroshima
 On August
6, 1945, the Enola Gay
dropped its atomic bomb on the city of
Hiroshima.

The Japanese did not surrender.
On August 9, the United States dropped
an atomic bomb on Nagasaki.
Finally, on August 15 – known from then on as
V-J Day—the Japanese emperor Hirohito
announced the end of the war.
Nagasaki
Challenges after the War
 United


Nations
Representatives from 50 countries met to
form a new organization, the United Nations.
The UN was meant to encourage cooperation
among nations and to prevent wars.
Challenges after the War
 Potsdam



Conference
Allied leaders met in the German city of
Potsdam to discuss the spread of communism
and Soviet influence in the postwar world.
Truman hoped to get Stalin to live up to his
promises from Yalta.
Stalin did not do this.
Challenges after the War
 Rebuilding



MacArthur led efforts to help Japan rebuild its
government and economy.
Seven Japanese leaders were tried for war
crimes.
Rebuilding Europe caused tensions between
the U.S and the Soviet Union.